Posts Tagged ‘World Health Organisation’

  1. Does end of the global Swine Flu Pandemic mean we’re better prepared for next time?

    Published on Friday, August 13th, 2010

    The World Health Organization (WHO) earlier this week officially declared an end to the pandemic concerning the influenza H1N1 virus, popularly known as swine flu. 

    However WHO Director-General Margaret Chan recognised that here in New Zealand we’re still experiencing the effects of a second wave of H1N1.
    “In the post-pandemic period, localised outbreaks of different magnitude may show significant levels of H1N1 transmission. This is the situation we are observing right now in New Zealand,” Mrs Chan said.

    The outcome of this for some has been particularly tragic.  However, as recently reported in NZ Dr, this year’s weekly rate of flu consults is well down on last year.

    Communications before, during and after were to my mind a great example of how to get it right.  Unfortunately not everyone has seen it that way.  As the predicted apocalypse did not occur, many people say the whole thing was a money-making venture by pharmaceutical companies.  While these theories make for great headlines they also significantly diminish the genuine efforts of public health protection teams globally, who potentially saved hundreds of thousands of lives.

    We will never know how bad it could have been had the level of alarm not been raised.  After all only 450 people died in the UK compared to the predicted 65,000 which surely proves it all an unnecessary scaremongering exercise?  Shame on the health experts for saving some lives.  When dealing with statistics it is easy to forget that only one number matters to people – the one that affects them. 

    Closer to home our own public health protection specialists implemented a textbook case of how to effectively contain a highly contagious and potentially deadly disease.  You can read about it in the BMJ’s May 21st edition

    Dr Craig Thornley, Medical Officer of Health at Auckland Regional Public Health Service shared with us a brief overview (below) of the basics of the response in New Zealand which highlights the complexity behind some very simple messages.

    • The pandemic response in New Zealand had several partly-overlapping strategic phases, all of which had been previously laid out in the New Zealand Influenza Pandemic Action Plan.
    • The first phase was termed ‘keep it out’, and was about delaying introduction of the virus into New Zealand to give healthcare services time to mobilise their plans. This initially seemed critically important as reports were being received from Mexico that suggested that the illness had a high mortality.
    • We were concurrently running a ‘stamp it out’ phase: when people with swine flu were diagnosed in the community we launched a rapid response to “ring-fence” spread by distributing antivirals (mainly Tamiflu) to those they had been in contact with. Again, this strategy was also intended to try to delay spread.
    • We moved into the ‘manage it’ phase when it became clear that swine flu was widespread in the community. During this phase a range of groups mobilised to support those who were unwell to ensure that those with mild-to-moderate illness could be managed away from the hospitals; hospitals re-allocated capacity to deal with the increased workload, particularly in intensive care units (who experienced high demand with sick young people requiring very aggressive life support); public health units focused attention on outbreaks in residential institutions; and a variety of strategies were applied in primary care to help cope with the influx of swine flu patients.
    • Throughout each of these phases, there were intensive health education campaigns on ways to prevent flu spread, protective equipment was distributed to healthcare workers (the healthcare workforce being one of the most-exposed groups), and systems for testing and making treatment available were streamlined.
    • All of this was designed to “flatten the curve” to try to delay the peak of the outbreak, reduce the overall number of cases and spread the caseload across a period of time instead of having a massive early epidemic peak that could have jeopardised provision of healthcare and many other services. As the nature of the illness caused by swine flu became clearer, strategies were tailored around protecting those that were most vulnerable.

    Communicating risk so people take action to protect themselves appropriately is a tricky thing, and when people are protected from the risk it can be tempting for people to think the risk wasn’t there in the first place.  Unfortunately even one untimely death is one too many though. Best we not get complacent about the next infectious threat that comes our way.

  2. Giving is in the blood

    Published on Thursday, June 11th, 2009

    It seems every day brings a new cause to support. Charities are constantly pushing their barrow into our lives with some national awareness month, week, day, hour, minute, second…whatever.  Ads with desperately cute but painfully sad looking children appear everywhere, designed to tug at the heart strings – and more often than not the wallet.  Amongst this torrent of worthy persuasion, is a communications professional poised to bombard every newsdesk in town to drive their message home.

    For all not-for-profits the challenge of influencing journalists and convincing media decision-makers of the value of your cause is relentless. Sometimes it can be met with an air of indifference. Indeed a recent conversation with one particular journalist went something like this… “I need something more newsworthy. Find me someone who’s dying!”

    In working at Network PR I’ve been able to work for the NZ Blood Service (NZBS), and I know from personal experience the importance of blood donation.  My grandmother passed away twelve years ago after a long illness, but without the people who donated the blood she regularly received, she would have died a lot sooner.

    World Blood Donor Day is the NZ Blood Service’s main annual campaign and happens to be celebrated in this country on Friday 12 June.  The campaign is largely driven by the World Health Organisation who decides on its annual theme.  As in other years, we have the challenge of creating attention.

    One of the pluses for the New Zealand Blood Service is its point of difference: it is not seeking money. And in the current climate this is quite significant. People who donate blood save lives – simple as that.  And all it costs is about an hour of time.

    Currently around 4% of New Zealanders donate blood without incentive or remuneration.  Some have their own personal stories for this. Others simply donate for no other reason than it’s a good thing to do.

    Annually around 42,000 people need this blood, many unexpectedly, others regularly. Statistically there is a good chance we’ll all have a need for blood at some point.

    As far as I’m concerned that’s the best reason of all for taking special note of World Blood Donor Day and the work of the NZ Blood Service.